Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Galaxy S24 Ultra vs. iPhone 15 Pro Max: Camera Comparison”.
This is the Samsung Galaxy s24 Ultra. It has four rear cameras and here’s Apple’s iPhone 15 Pro Max. It has three rear cameras. How do they stack up against each other? Let’S find out the shiny, titanium, clad and color Galaxy s24 Ultra has a starting price of $ 1,300 and two cameras dedicated to zooming Apple’s, titanium, clad and colored. Iphone 15 Pro Max starts at $ 1,200 and has one zoom camera look, let me just say the obvious: either of these phones take some of the absolute best photos you can get from any phone today, especially in challenging environments like high contrast, scenes or places with Low lighting take a look at some of my favorite photos and videos from each phone. Pretty impressive right now. Behind those photos is some truly Cutting Edge.
Camera Hardware, the iPhone 15 Pro Max – has a main camera with a 48 map sensor and the equivalent of a 24 mm lens with an F 1.78 aperture there’s also an ultra wide camera, with a 12 megap sensor and and an f2.2 13 mm lens and a 5X telephoto camera with a 12 megap sensor and an f2.8 120 mm lens, then there’s the ultra now think of it, as if Apple took the 15 Pro Max and added the dedicated three times, telephoto camera from the iPhone 15 Pro to the back, thus creating an Iphone 15 Ultra of sorts. The s24 ultra has a main camera with a 200 megapix sensor and an f1.7 23mm lens there’s also an ultra wide camera. With a 12 megapix sensor and an f2.2 13 mm lens, a 3X telephoto camera with a 10 megapixel sensor and an f2.4 69 mm lens and a new brand new, absolutely new 5x telephoto camera with a 50 megapixel sensor and an F 3.4 115 mm lens. That’S a lot of damn cameras. Remember the days when phones just had one, both Apple and Samsung, used the main camera’s higher resolution sensors, as well as Samsung on its 5x telephoto camera, to combine pixels for brighter photos with more detail and less image noise. In terms of shooting experience, I have to shout out the s24 ultra’s new screen, Which is far less reflective than the iPhone.
I have no trouble seeing what’s on the iPhone 15 Pro Max’s screen, but the ultra display feels more immersive, because I don’t see as much glare when I’m taking photos. The camera apps on both phones are packed with familiar options like dedicated Photo Video in portrait modes. The ability to shoot raw files and change resolution on some of the cameras now the iPhone has the ability to capture prores, video files and spatial videos which can be viewed on the Vision Pro and meta Quest.
3 VR headsets, Samsung’s camera app, has dedicated PR modes for photos and videos and is more customizable. I can move the modes around to my liking, use the S, pin as a remote shutter button to take a photo and one of my favorite options. I have the ability to use a floating shutter button that I can position anywhere on the screen to take a photo in terms of photos.
Let’S get into some head-to-head comparisons. Now for this video, I’m only going to highlight a handful of photos but check out my full written comparison on CNET for more. Let’S start with a challenging high contrast scene at Sunset over the mission I’m impressed with both of these images from each phone’s main camera.
The biggest difference is the way each handles the glare from the sun, which is more obvious in the iPhones photo, but the s24 ultra snap is a tad brighter, especially when you punch in a bit, you can see how the s24 ultra boosts those shadows and the Detail notice the trees at the bottom right in the iPhones picture. They get lost in the shadows, but in the ultra image you can actually make out more of the individual branches. Here’S another set of photos from the main cameras this time of a plant in a window again, first glance very similar, but I like how the s24 ultra rolls off the highlights on the leaves.
If we look at the books that the plant is on, the text is readable. In both images, though, it’s more crisp in the iPhone’s photo here are a pair of photos from the ultrawide cameras from my CNET colleagues, Amy and Jessica playing foosball now compared to the main camera, there’s definitely a step down in image quality, but compared to each other. They are both very similar. Both phones applied a bunch of noise reduction notice. The ceiling in the iPhone’s photo is riddled with image noise and in the ultra photo. The noise is gone but looks overly soft and almost blurry, but if we focus on Jessica notice that the iPhone’s photo looks more natural, albeit soft, from motion blur, whereas in the ultra image she looks almost like a painting from all the noise reduction and oversharpening.
Let’S move on to some portraits now I absolutely love this one from the ultra of my CET pal celso, taken with the dedicated three times, zoom camera. There’S a good balance between detail and the highlights. I mean they look so good. It’S subtle, but the cutout effect looks clean with the transition between InFocus and out of focus. Looking natural, the color is a bit saturated, but I don’t mind that and speaking of 3x here are a pair of 3x photos from both phones. Now remember, the ultra has a dedicated three times camera, whereas the iPhone is using three times digital Zoom.
To get the same image and you can see the difference, the iPhone’s photo isn’t bad, but has artifacts from the digital Zoom, especially around the flag. Overall, the iPhone’s photo looks softer notice, the details in the ornamentation on the building in the background, but also in the bricks, in the building on the right side. Here’S another pair of three times zoomed in photos of a Star Wars, figurine on my desk.
The ultra photo looks better in every way now before we jump to looking at the five times. Zoom cameras. Do me a favor and please comment, but let me know what phone you have and how much you use the telephoto or zoom lens on it. Here are some photos of downtown San Francisco that I took from a rooftop with the five time zoom cameras on both phes now right away. You can see that the iPhone Nails focus and look.
I I don’t know if it was the sun reflecting off Salesforce Tower, but the ultra struggled to grab focus and hunted for it. In this particular setup anytime, I was using the five time. Zoom camera, especially when I started to zoom in digitally here, are images in focus from both phones at five time. Zoom.
Now I like the ultas more. It feels like the iPhone is protecting the highlights by ramping down the exposure and, as a consequence, the Shadows are darker. The ultra has good detail throughout notice.
The trees in the foreground and the windows on sales Force tower now here are 10x Zoom photos from both phones, and here are photos taken at 15 time, zoom from the iPhone and the ultra and again with the ultra. I struggled with it getting focused, all four photos are out of focus and the fourth one is the least out of focus, and here are photos from both phones at 25 times Zoom, which is the max digital zoom on the iPhone. Now you could definitely get away with sharing these on social media, but neither photo looks good now.
I have to give the edge to the ultra photo, which looks cleaner, but the ultra can zoom in even more and the quality of the photo deteriorates even more. Here’S a 50 time zoom photo and, as you can see, the noise reduction is making the image look more like a painting than a photo from a $ 1,300 phone and here’s one at a 100 times Zoom it is so processed and so soft it does doesn’t. Even look like a photo and again the phone struggled to get focus, and here are a pair of five time. Zoom photos of Amy the cat.
Now both photos look good. The iPhone captured more of the texture in her fur and is overall brighter and here’s a pair of five times Zoom photos of Jessica, the ultra photo looks softer and yet more natural because of it. Whereas the iPhone snap looks a tad sharper and skews the color temperature cooler, so let’s wrap up, as you saw, both phones take excellent photos. In my time with the ultra, I have been blown away by the quality of the photos, especially those from both of the zoom cameras, and I absolutely love that low reflection screen. It’S a small but significant difference, but that’s all I have if you’ve enjoyed this video.
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